Showing posts with label Randall Bramblett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Randall Bramblett. Show all posts

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Randall Bramblett - The Bright Spots

Size: 134,3 MB
Time: 58:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Roll (3:21)
02. Every Saint (5:14)
03. Til The Partys All Gone (5:07)
04. My Darling One (4:55)
05. Whatever That Is (4:25)
06. John The Baptist (5:19)
07. Shine (4:53)
08. Trying To Steal A Minute (5:58)
09. Detox Bracelet (4:24)
10. You Bring Me Down (4:51)
11. All Is Well (5:07)
12. Rumbling Bridge (4:40)

Throughout Randall Bramblett's long, storied career as a sideman and as a solo artist, he has doggedly mined the sources of his earliest inspirations -- soul, R&B, blues, and roots rock -- for the lessons they teach about creative expression. As a result, his albums have always moved a little deeper, a little wider, and have taken enough chances with those forms that he's too mercurial to pin down -- he's a marketing person's nightmare, but a real music fan's (and musician's) delight. The Bright Spots, his ninth offering, is at once his loosest and most adventurous studio recording. Bramblett raised $30,000 in a Kickstarter campaign to fund the recording. Seven tunes were recorded with his longtime band and some friends at drummer, co-producer, and engineer Gerry Hansen's studio near Bramblett's home in Athens, Georgia, while the remainder were done with a smaller group in Nashville. The different lineups and locations add a varied, very live-from-the-floor feel (which in fact most of these cuts were), despite the fact that Hansen and Bramblett took some real chances in post-production. One example is on the smoking, midtempo gospel blues "Every Saint," with its canny loop of Pygmy children splashing around in a creek as both intro and backdrop. There are some popping, funky rockers, including opener "Roll," with its stinging guitars, wailing B-3, and punchy horns. The grimy, psych-tinged, gospelized groove of "John the Baptist" (with a killer baritone sax by Tom Ryan and spacy Coral electric sitar by Davis Causey) is a real standout. "Whatever That Is" is swampy, Rhodes-fueled blues, while "Trying to Steal a Minute" is a steamy, nocturnal, suffocatingly close, shuffling funk blues with throbbing bass, big hypnotic shuffling drums, and layered washes of keyboards and guitar. The loop-drenched blues funk in "You Bring Me Down" is forceful for Betsy Franck's gospel wail soaring above the musical fray. The finest moments here are the ballads. Bramblett seems to have been listening to the Mercury-era Rod Stewart records when he wrote the gorgeous love song "My Darling One." The tender, shimmering, poetic "Detox Bracelet," with its lithe keyboards and skittering hi-hat, is his own startling, unique invention. Throughout the record, Bramblett's dusky, soulful voice inhabits his words as if what is portrayed by them is happening in real time, and while the considerable hooks help him there, it's his poignant lyrics that bring him the rest of the way into the center. In this latter area, he's as good -- and as deep -- as virtually anybody. The Bright Spots, while immediately recognizable as a Bramblett album, doesn't sound like anything else in his catalog. It's bold, inventive, colorful, and at times profound. ~by Thom Jurek

The Bright Spots

Friday, July 14, 2017

Randall Bramblett - Thin Places

Size: 111,2 MB
Time: 47:26
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Nobody's Problem (4:21)
02. Playing Card (4:15)
03. You Can Be The Rain (4:32)
04. Gotta Stop Somewhere (3:44)
05. Comin 'round Soon (4:02)
06. Black Coat (4:36)
07. Confident Thieves (3:20)
08. Are You Satisfied (4:06)
09. Chet Baker (5:07)
10. Red Booth (4:13)
11. I Don't Care (5:06)

On his fifth album as leader -- and his second for New West -- wily Southern singer/songwriter Randall Bramblett keeps his cards close to the rock & roll vest, and cranks out songs that ring so large, they're almost anthems. While there a thousand songwriters who deserve more attention than they get, it's as a singer that Bramblett separates himself from the pack. His gritty, grainy, in-your-face delivery makes no apologies and takes no prisoners -- he conveys emotion in every syllable. On Thin Places, he teams up with Nash Vegas producer and session bassist Michael Rhodes, and co-writes with mate Jason Slatton on more than half of the album's 11 selections. Along with his regular band -- which is a diverse unit of crack players who include guitarists Slatton, Kenny Greenberg, and Davis Causey, as well as drummer Shawn Pelton, while Rhodes handles the bass chores -- Bramblett takes the country out of Southern rock, the hooks out of radio-friendly pop, and the roundness out of rock attack, and offers a smoking little record of songs that have at their heart a poetic intensity, an emotional delivery, and a rough-hewn grace. Standout tracks are the ringing "You Can Be the Rain," the slow, raggedly beautiful shuffle "Nobody's Problem" (which sounds like Crazy Horse fronting a band led by Delbert McClinton instead of Neil Young) and the shimmering midnight soul-fried funkiness of "Black Coat," with Bramblett's Hammond B-3 slithering through the mix with ghostly fills. The darkly swirling "Chet Baker" also makes its mark with gorgeous chord voicings from Bramblett's piano. The languid pace of the track and its bubbling, subtly insistent rhythm track move the cut with beautiful atmospherics. Thin Places is a genre-busting album, one that is realized with confidence and plenty of heart. It is the mark of a mature artist at the peak of his powers of reining in the various forces at his disposal as a lyricist and as a tunesmith. As a singer he has passed his own high-water mark for emotional authenticity and sheer gutsy verve. ~by Thom Jurek

Thin Places

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Randall Bramblett - No More Mr. Lucky

Size: 121,0 MB
Time: 51:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. God Was In The Water (5:43)
02. Get In Get Out (3:28)
03. Lost Enough (4:44)
04. Peace In Here (3:42)
05. Sunflower (3:30)
06. Aching For A Dream (6:17)
07. Hard To Be A Human (4:28)
08. Strange Conversation (5:23)
09. End Of The String (4:32)
10. Vague Child (5:13)
11. Disappearing Ink (4:46)

On the cover of this album you see a picture that looks like it was taken in the 1940s: a man wearing a suit and old leather shoes, carrying an old leather suitcase in one hand and a hat in the other. Add these visual clues to the fact that the album is on the New West label, and you might end up expecting a program of gritty, country-influenced singer/songwriter fare, with chiming guitars, angst-ridden lyrics, and the occasional pedal steel in the background. Wrong. The very first song, "God Was in the Water," starts things off with an almost Bootsy Collins-ish bass sound and over-tremoloed guitar, both of which lead up to the entrance of Bramblett's artlessly rough voice. He keeps you off guard through the rest of the album, chugging funkily through the talking blues of "Get in Get Out," veering off into horn-driven jangle pop on the gorgeous "Peace in Here," and mixing rusty-sounding slide guitar with drum loops and flat vocal declamation on "Hard to Be a Human." This is one of those albums that keeps revealing itself; you may not start really cluing in until the third or fourth listen. ~by Rick Anderson

No More Mr. Lucky

Friday, May 5, 2017

Randall Bramblett & Geoff Achison - Jammin' In The Attic (Live At Eddie's Attic)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:19
Size: 172.4 MB
Styles: Rockin blues
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[ 5:20] 1. Sent To The Edge
[ 5:17] 2. Queen Of England
[ 4:48] 3. Nobody's Problem
[ 5:48] 4. One Ticket, One Ride
[ 5:58] 5. My World
[ 6:14] 6. Tell Me Something
[ 3:59] 7. Driving To Montgomery
[ 9:31] 8. Rule The World
[ 8:34] 9. See Through Me
[10:49] 10. Jungle
[ 8:55] 11. Get In Get Out

Randall Bramblett - vocals, acoustic guitar, tenor sax, keyboards; Geoff Achison - vocals, acoustic and electric guitars; Yonrico Scott - drums; Ted Pecchio - bass; Oliver Wood - electric guitar.

Every once in a while lightning strikes and, if you get lucky, it gets captured! That's what happened on 6/13/10 when this live performance at the legendary Eddie's Attic in Decatur, GA was recorded. This CD is a wonderful example of what can happen when two great musicians and songwriters join forces. The dynamic duo alternate between Randall's songs and Geoff's original tunes, and the result is greater than the sum of the parts. Check out how Achison's sensitive accompaniment enhances Bramblett's "Nobody's Problem" or how Randall's sax perfectly complements Geoff's "Rule the World." Oliver Wood of King Johnson adds scorching electric guitar licks to tunes like Achison's "Jungle" and Bramblett's "Get In Get Out," proving that with musicians of this caliber, more is definitely merrier!

Jammin' In The Attic (Live At Eddie's Attic) mc
Jammin' In The Attic (Live At Eddie's Attic) zippy

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Lisa Biales - Belle Of The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 39:25
Size: 90.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary blues vocals
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:09] 1. Belle Of The Blues (Feat. Pat Bergeson)
[4:27] 2. Sad Sad Sunday (Feat. Tommy Talton & Randall Bramblett)
[4:00] 3. Bad Things (Feat. Randall Bramblett, Ken Wynn, Eg Kight & Tommy Talton)
[3:08] 4. Mask (Feat. Tommy Talton, Paul Hornsby & Randall Bramblett)
[4:09] 5. Graveyard Dead Blues (Feat. Tommy Talton, Paul Hornsby & Bill Stewart)
[3:06] 6. Baby Won't You Please Come Home (Feat. Paul Hornsby)
[3:51] 7. In My Girlish Days (Feat. Eg Kight & Tommy Talton)
[2:58] 8. Peach Pickin' Mama (Feat. Tommy Talton & Pat Bergeson)
[3:25] 9. Black & White Blues (Feat. Tommy Talton & Paul Hornsby)
[3:18] 10. Trouble (Feat. Eg Kight, Ken Wynn & Paul Hornsby)
[3:50] 11. Bad Girl (Feat. Randall Bramblett & Ken Wynn)

When Jimmy Page or Jeff Beck play guitar, the line between man and instrument is blurred. When John Popper blows harp, the hair standing up on my arm tells me that I’m witnessing someone doing what they were put on this earth to do. With Lisa Biales, her purpose is to sing the blues. It was something I sensed immediately on Just Like Honey then Singing In my Soul, both of which lead up to her choice new album Belle Of The Blues.

As a singer Biales comes across as equal parts good-natured speakeasy vixen and soulful southern torch balladeer. Produced by EG Kight and engineered by Paul Hornsby, this album compares to Maria Muldaur’s Memphis Minnie tribute from a year or two back. Performances from the musicians are joyous lessons in how to groove, not unlike Biales herself. Featured guests are the amazing Tommy Talton on guitar (Gregg Allman, Dickey Betts), Randall Bramblett on Hammond B-3 (Sea Level, Steve Winwood, Widespread Panic) and Bill Stewart on drums (Gregg Allman, Bonnie Bramlett), and they play like they’ve been doing it together for years- on that gut-level instinctual plane.

“I love singing sad songs” Lisa confesses. “The strong array of emotions that bubble up, and the connections I feel to people while singing them makes me realize my worth”, referring directly to Mask and Sad, Sad Sunday. She considers Bessie Smith an influence, and it shows. She calls Smith “One of the greatest classic blues singers of the 1920’s, and someone I have grown to admire. It’s only fitting to have her presence on this recording with two songs; Black & White Blues and Baby Won’t You Please Come Home.”

Belle Of The Blues